The effects of the electrical double layer near the solid-liquid nels, where the theory is well developed and documented (1), interface and the induced electrokinetic field on the pressureno widely accepted theories have been established for the interdriven liquid flow through a rectangular microcha
Electro-Viscous Effects on Liquid Flow in Microchannels
β Scribed by Liqing Ren; Dongqing Li; Weilin Qu
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2001
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 190 KB
- Volume
- 233
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-9797
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The presence of the electrical double layer near a solid-liquid interface results in the electro-viscous effect on pressure-driven liquid flow through microchannels. The objective of this paper is to examine the magnitude of the additional flow resistance caused by the electrokinetic effect in microchannels. Deionized ultrafiltered water, 10 -4 and 10 -2 M aqueous KCl solutions, 10 -4 M AlCl 3 solution, and 10 -4 M LiCl solution were used as the testing liquids. Carefully designed flow measurements were conducted in three silicon microchannels with a height of 14.1, 28.2, and 40.5 Β΅m, respectively. The measured dP/dx for the pure water, the 10 -4 M KCl solution, and the 10 -4 M LiCl solution was found to be significantly higher than the prediction of the conventional laminar flow theory at the same Reynolds number. Such a high flow resistance and the resulting high apparent viscosity strongly depend on the channel's height, the ionic valence, and the concentration of the liquids. The zeta potentials for the liquid-solid systems were calculated by using the measured streaming potential data. The experimentally determined dP/dx βΌ Re relationships were compared with the predictions of a theoretical electro-viscous flow model, and a good agreement was found for pure water, 10 -4 M KCl solution, and 10 -4 M AlCl 3 solution systems. The present electrokinetic flow model cannot interpret the flow characteristics of the LiCl solution.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The sedimentation velocity of multiparticle suspensions was investigated expetimentally for cases where the column wall is likely to have a nonnegligible effect. The experiments demonstrate that the container wall diameter influences the falling velocity only for dilute systems, which is in contrast